Mr. Luis Cantarell, President and CEO of Nestlé Health Science S.A. and Head of Nestlé Nutrition, read a prepared response again stating Nestlé was
the only baby milk company that made it onto the FTSE4Good index.
Not exact matches
Probably the
only whistleblower from inside the multinational
company, who reported about his practices as
baby milk salesman with doctors and hospitals in Pakistan.
Baby Milk Action protested to the Fairtrade Organization that the awarding of a seal of ethical approval to a
company with such a disgraceful ethical record could
only be misleading to the public and would hardly contribute to the welfare of the impoverished people of the world.
After 7 years of development, The Honest
Company has released their premium organic infant formula which is carefully modeled after breast
milk and crafted using
only organic, naturally - derived and high quality ingredients to help ensure that your
baby is getting pure, safe and quality nutrition.
Company employees (often dressed like health - care workers) went to hospitals and health clinics to counsel women on formula use — ignoring the proven advantages of breast
milk, formula's astronomical cost for Third World families and the fact that many women had
only contaminated water for preparing formula, thus starkly increasing a
baby's risk of contracting life - threatening diarrhea.
Companies have been delisted for failing to provide Communications on Progress, but as these are posted to the Global Compact website even if proven to be misleading, as in the case of Nestlé, they
only serve a public relations purpose, says
Baby Milk Action.
No one argues that Nestlé is the
only company to have been involved in less - than - perfect practices - Ibfan and, in the UK, the campaigning group
Baby Milk Action, say they target the
company because they claim it has violated the code more than any other single
company worldwide, and also that - as a market leader - it should be setting an example.